My main realization in this week’s reading and exploring of websites was that not only is the network of history websites vast and difficult to categorize, but even more that I have hardly begun to examine the wide variety of history on the web. Beginning with the Designing Generas article I had a hard time understanding exactly what the authors were talking about, but as I explored the other articles and then this week’s websites I began to understand the various levels of difficulty in categorizing and grouping historical websites. They are simply produced and consumed on so many different levels that any single way of categorizing/labeling forces you to ignore a variety of other ways in which these sites might be linked, utilized, or understood. Each of the websites also puts forth different forms of organization, which demonstrate strengths and weaknesses. Again here it simply becomes hard to describe as comparing the sites in one way forces you to realize that they could also be compared in numerous other ways. In my first examination the Valley of the Shadow seems to have direct and simple organization as compared with the incredible complexity of organization on the History Wired website. The National Geographic site is innovative in its use of multimedia, but the Imaging the French Revolution site allows for more in depth ways of exploring images of the French Revolution that could also be applied to Pearl Harbor in helpful ways, but it would be a very different version than the National Geographic website. Exploring these websites clarifies the difficulty in picking the most effective medium for examining an historical subject.
Now for a few questions:
One small interesting thing struck me early on in the Digital History article as they said, “Even by 1996, the “walking city” that was the History Web a year earlier had become a sprawling megalopolis that no one person could fully explore.” Their analogy comparing the History Web to a walking city that was growing exponentially is interesting. Not only does this demonstrate rapid expansion of the History Web and the increasing inability to fully explore it, but it brings to mind the changes in transportation that came with the transition from walking cities to tracked cities to rubber (or automobile-based) cities within American urban history. Each of these transitions not only expanded the city but also transformed how residents and visitors of that city interacted with the city.
Now, before I totally lose the analogy, what I’m wondering is whether the expansion of the History Web not only made it so that we couldn’t explore it all, but also changed the way that we interact with the websites that we do explore. I’m not sure exactly how it might change but I think it gives rise to an interesting question of how we connect with historical websites when there are so many of them. Are we more apt to “drive by” a website that does not present its information in ways that pull us in? Are we more likely to cruise through a large number of sites rather than stay at any one site for a longer amount of time? The creation of highways in physical cities also changed the way that residents of those cities interacted with one another. How might the expansion of the History Web change the way that historical websites interact with each other? Do historical websites link together in different ways than they did in earlier years? Is there a greater sense of competition? Do we even take the time to explore neighbors’ (be that content-based, regional, or other types of neighbors) websites or are we connected more directly to websites outside of the historical arena?
A second comment in that article that forced me to think about the nature of online historical archives and the accessibility of history was where they pointed out that “in addition to the costs of scanning and indexing, the copyright ownership of most of the intellectual products of the twentieth century means that only an entity that can sell access to the past can also afford to purchase the rights to it.” The fact that then only large organizations can purchcase access to these archives seems to make at least some components of history more easily accessible to those with organizational affiliations. Those who are not students or connected in some way to an organization which purchases access to the archive are thus not able to view these documents. It seems the goal of these online archives is to make history more easily accessible, but what does it mean that we are only increasing access for a few privileged groups? Does this accentuate existing inequalities? Is it worth the cost of accentuating existing inequalities if it makes history more easily accessible to some?